The language of love

Sitting on my back deck, I’ve been thinking about how important my relationship is to me, and how important romantic love is to so many people.

I don’t think a single one of us said to ourselves, “ I hope one day that I have a somewhat interesting, average, and ordinary relationship. I hope we don't fight very often and I hope that we connect sometimes, perhaps even having sex once or twice a year!!!

Nobody says that! Nobody ever says that! And yet, somehow this is what many couples are left with over time.

How do we embrace the realities of life? How do we deal with the ups and downs, the unavoidable challenges- while at the same time, rise above it, without pretending?

Is it possible to be a happy couple, a joyful couple, even in the face of everything that comes our way?

There was a time when we hoped for, prayed for, and even worked for, having a happy, joyful, and amazing relationship. What if instead of hoping we spent more time and energy building something, putting the relationship on track? Could we then realize our dream of having a happy, joyful, and amazing relationship, no matter what?

Yes! And after interviewing happy couples of ten years or more, they all agreed, having this caliber of relationship takes developing a new kind of thinking - one that will encourage a profound way of relating to our partner - and our lives. It will require practicing the “Language of Love”.

Love is always the answer, and it is more important than our circumstances.
It is more important than our judgments, our opinions, winning or being right. Love is bigger than all of it. Everything bows to love. So then, let’s put love first. Let’s put the relationship first!

Understanding, and developing the Language of Love

The Language of Love is FORGIVENESS. Now, have an open mind and keep reading. I know you have an understanding of forgiveness and that you’re likely very good at forgiving or, at least, you try to be. But in this post, we are going to see forgiveness in a new way - a deeper way.
There was a 1970 movie that became the highest grossing film of all time. It was called Love Story, starring Ali McGraw and Ryan O’Neal. From that movie came a famous line, “love is never having to say you’re sorry”.

Saying I’m sorry is one way we view forgiveness. What if there were varying degrees of forgiveness? From the first degree to highest degree?

The first degree being, the most common and rather ordinary. Not to minimize it - it’s just not the kind of forgiveness we are looking for, when referring to the Language of Love. The Language of Love being the highest degree of forgiveness - one that is only accessible by using the practice of letting go.

Why is the first degree necessary?

Do not underestimate the first degree of forgiveness’ necessity; it’s just not inspiring, but it is necessary for human interaction. Why is it necessary? Consider those times, that you’ve made an error, a mistake. You were sorry, and wanted to be forgiven. In some cases, you were, and in others, maybe not. By the same token there are those that wronged you that you either forgave or you didn’t.

The first degree of forgiveness requires language, there has to be a dialogue, whereas, the highest degree of forgiveness is dramatically distinct. It is the Language of Love, though often without dialogue, it absolutely communicates.

LET’S BREAK IT DOWN

The best way to understand this degree of forgiveness is to break it down.

The Language of Love is to be forgiving.

For - Giving

For, as in you are for something. Like a fan is for their team. You are ‘for’ – giving. Not giving as in gifting, but rather, giving, as in 'to allow for’.

So, it is in this realm of ‘allowing for’, ‘making room for’, that is the Language of Love. The access begins with letting go of our automatic reactions. Reactions to our partner not being how we think they should be or how we would prefer to have them be.

We allow for, and give room to, however they are in the moment. That’s FOR-GIVING, allowing for the way one is, or the way one can sometimes be. We 'let go’ of finding reasons to be upset. Letting go of our automatic reactions - that’s the access to the highest degree of forgiveness.

This certainly doesn’t eliminate having conversations that will impact the future. On the contrary, this is exactly how we gain entry to those kinds of conversations. It is truly the most constructive way.

The first degree of forgiveness requires an action; a doing or saying something, while the highest degree of forgiveness is an attitude; a being some way.

The highest degree allows for breakdowns. It includes that they will happen. It allows for problems, troubles, and insecurities. It allows for another’s humanity and our own. It includes that something will always be happening at varying degrees of intensity and on either side of the scale - good for me and sometimes not so good for me.

This degree of ‘forgiving’ allows space for whatever is happening, it doesn’t resist. Rather, it allows for it, includes it, and makes room for it.

The Language of Love eliminates judgment. Of course, the judgment of others, but also the judgment of ourselves. Judgment of the past, one’s flaws, failures, and even accomplishments. Judgment robs the experience of love. Forgiveness, on the other hand, allows for the experience, the expression and the expansion of love, no matter what.

No matter what!

It is this kind of forgiveness that, after a major challenge, allows a couple to be whole again. It determine’s their future. Each day and every moment, you and I create how we will respond in the face of what’s happening - in the face of any circumstance. We can give power to our reaction or give power to the practice of letting go. From there, we can re-create our relationships.

Long-lasting, happy couples that I interviewed have this in common: they are forgiving; they practice the Language of Love.

It is a practice.

They want to be married or coupled, they want to thrive, and that’s what fuels the practice. They develop the highest degree of forgiveness through practice and they make it natural.

Maintaining high degrees of love in a relationship is ongoing. Relationships are not necessarily easy, but they are extremely rewarding.

“Life is difficult. This is a great truth, one of the greatest truths. It is a great truth because once we truly see this truth, we transcend it. Once we truly know that life is difficult-once we truly understand and accept it-then life is no longer difficult. Because once it is accepted, the fact that life is difficult no longer matters.” Scott Peck, The Road Less Traveled